Just Channel Hopping!

Leg 3, there was some serious swell and when Caz got out she'd been breathing 3 stroke, 2 stroke and 4 stroke just to be able to get through it.

Again it didn't seem to take long before it was my turn again. In I got but there were no ships passing for me to head towards so I ended up going off course. I heard eventually Paul, Caz and I think someone else shouting my name and pointing going "That Way!!!" oops . Back on course again and it was my turn to battle the waves, I had the feeling of going up and down and not very far forward too. I did see Caz and Ray on deck clapping at one point which was a huge boost. Eventually it started to calm a little but then there were huge patches of seaweed and Paul kept pointing to go out so I missed the biggest patches.

Caz ready to go again, I'd started to look for the Pirate hat as I really hadn't enjoyed that leg at all which was what I said as got back on the boat.

Leg 4, LJS wsn't having a great time on this leg and I wasn't as warm as I would have lliked despite being snuggled in my sleeping bag. I know I said to Caz that the thought of getting in again was the last thing I wanted to do. She rightly pointed out that it wouldn't be so bad when I got in and she was right. I now fully understand the mental anguish of doing something like this and people saying it's as much the mental as physical.

Paul had said I needed to swim a great leg to try to get to a certain point before the tide changed. He also shouted as soon as LJS gets close enough for you to get in behind him GO! I did, I suspect LJS was very pleased to see the Pirate hat and know he could nearly get out. Full respect to him for finishing that leg when he clearly wasn't happy.

I really enjoyed this leg until the last 10 minutes, It seemed to be flowing quite nicely but with no reference I had no idea whether it was enough. I could see a lot of activity on the boat and people huddled talking, I didn't really think much of it. A rather large container ship passed in front of us and that is a very surreal vision.

The last 10 minutes of that swim my shoulders started to ache and I was getting a bit cold. I saw caz ready to go and thought thank god and then she disappeared!! What I was muttering in my head really wasn't very ladylike and it seemed to be forever before she was in behind me.

Back on the boat and after a Well Done I was told that LJS couldn't swim again and we weren't giong to complete it because we'd misseed the tide. My words were thank god although if we had been much closer than we were in terms of time I would have got back in and done 1 more leg. 2 hours I could cope with but not the possible 5 or 6 with us missing the tide..

Caz was still swimming strong but eventually the ladder went down for her to get back in and it was all over.

At the time I was too tired to be disappointed and even now I'm not that disappointed as I have positives

I swam the furthest in a day I ever have

I've still swum most of the channel

I've done something that not many people have

it wasn't the lack of training that stopped me

Thank you so much to Caz for organising it all and giving me that mental support before leg 4. Without IW posting on the Crap Swimmers thread I would never have got the opportunity to do this.

I did thoroughly enjoy it looking back, would I do it again? Never say never but right now once seems like enough although I don't like to let things beat me

Seen a few comments from people about the tides being a problem. That wasn't really the case. If you look at any Channel crossing you get a very similar graph.

The boat is always heading at a bearing of about 150 deg, which would be the shortest route if there weren't any currents. So the swimmers are only putting effort in to go in one direction. The currents should pull the swimmer sideways so they don't impact on the forward progress. In the water you can't feel the currents so you are not fighting them

If anything the current on the first half wasn't strong enough and ideally we should have been pulled further north east on the tide between about noon and 5pm. The second tide would have then pulled us back to the Cap.

Or we could have swum further east (i.e. faster) so that we weren't in the strongest part of the current when it got going. If we could have got east another mile before about 8pm then we would have been alright as we would have been close enough to the shore to get in the slacker water.

Ultimately it was down to lack of speed, which was caused by the trouble we had swimming in the washing machine conditions in the separation zone, and various nutrition, hydration and sickness issues of the swimmers, with a bit of bad luck thrown in for good measure. No one factor or person was solely responsible for how it went on the day.

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